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Matter can exist in three states: solid, liquid?æ or gases. In solid, particles are two close to each other. In liquid,they are a bit a part while in?æ gases they are very far apart .
it depends whenever it is a solid, liquid or gas
No, heating a liquid makes it's particles move farther apart (makes the liquid expand). This is most readily observed in an old glass thermometer. As your temperature goes up (as you heat the liquid in the thermometer), the liquid inside expands and travels up the thermometer.
No, particles in a solid only vibrate, whereas particles in a liquid are free to move within the liquid.
The particles in a liquid are close together. In a solid the particles are tightly packed together so you cannot compress them at all. The particles in a gas are far apart, so when they are compressed the volume of the gas reduces. The bonds in a liquid are not as close as those in a solid but they are still too close for compression.
The particles of a solid are close together and the particles of a liquid are slightly farther apart.
The particles of solids are very close and tight and are organised. The particles of liquids are randomly organised and are further apart. The molecules in gases are really far apart.
Matter can exist in three states: solid, liquid?æ or gases. In solid, particles are two close to each other. In liquid,they are a bit a part while in?æ gases they are very far apart .
its all about the particle arangements. in a solid the particles are close together, when it gets hot the particles get more energy so the particles vibrate therefore the particles are further apart. this is then the particle arrangements of a liquid. the more you heat, the more energy, so the particles will get further apart and in the end turn in to a gas... hope this help x
They are EXACTLY the same particles but in a liquid they are further apart and free to move round as compared to the particles in the solid form which are fixed in their position, one relative to the other.
The particles in a solid are close together.They are fixed in pace but can vibrate.The particles that make up a liquid are close together but usually farther apart than the particles in a solid are.They can slide freely past one another.The particles in gas are farther apart than particles in a liquid and solid.Gas particles move freely in any directions.
it depends whenever it is a solid, liquid or gas
You remove energy from it's solid state; then it returns to a liquid. The H20 molecules move further apart when you go from a solid to a liquid (and even further when it goes to a gas)
Because the heat energy makes the particles in the solid vibrate more and more, meaning that they need more room and they become more distant and they loose the perfect order they were once in, because of the movement. So if u r looking at the particle theory of solid, liquids and gases, the particles in the liquid are further apart then the solid because of this.
liquid particles do not join the solid particles because the particles of solid are very tightly packed but this is not in the case of liquid
Solid (particles closest together, lowest energy) Liquid Gas Plasma (particles farthest apart, highest energy)
No, heating a liquid makes it's particles move farther apart (makes the liquid expand). This is most readily observed in an old glass thermometer. As your temperature goes up (as you heat the liquid in the thermometer), the liquid inside expands and travels up the thermometer.